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The implementation shown in Fig. 1 is used by 3D Systems and some foreign manufacturers. A moveable table, or elevator (A), initially is placed at a position just below the surface of a vat (B) filled with liquid photopolymer resin (C). This material has the property that when light of the correct color strikes it, it turns from a liquid to a solid. The most common photopolymer materials used require an ultraviolet light, but resins that work with visible light are also utilized. The system is sealed to prevent the escape of fumes from the resin.
A laser beam is moved over the surface of the liquid photopolymer to trace the geometry of the cross-section of the object. This causes the liquid to harden in areas where the laser strikes. The laser beam is moved in the X-Y directions by a scanner system (D). These are fast and highly controllable motors which drive mirrors and are guided by information from the CAD data. The exact pattern that the laser traces is a combination of the information contained in the CAD system that describes the geometry of the object, and information from the rapid prototyping application software that optimizes the faithfulness of the fabricated object. Of course, application software for every method of rapid prototyping modifies the CAD data in one way or another to provide for operation of the machinery and to compensate for shortcomings. |

After the layer is completely traced and for the most part hardened by the laser beam, the table is lowered into the vat a distance equal to the thickness of a layer. The resin is generally quite viscous, however. To speed this process of recoating, early stereolithography systems drew a knife edge (E) over the surface to smooth it. More recently pump-driven recoating systems have been utilized. The tracing and recoating steps are repeated until the object is completely fabricated and sits on the table within the vat.
Some geometries of objects have overhangs or undercuts. These must be supported during the fabrication process. The support structures are either manually or automatically designed.
Upon completion of the fabrication process, the object is elevated from the vat and allowed to drain. Excess resin is swabbed manually from the surfaces. The object is often given a final cure by bathing it in intense light in a box resembling an oven called a Post-Curing Apparatus (PCA). Some resins and types of stereolithography equipment don't require this operation, however.
After final cure, supports are cut off the object and surfaces are sanded or otherwise finished.
Stereolithography generally is considered to provide the greatest accuracy and best surface finish of any rapid prototyping technology. Work continues to provide materials that have wider and more directly useable mechanical properties. Recently, inkjet technology has been extended to operation with photopolymers resulting in systems that have both fast operation and good accuracy. See the section on inkjets.
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